Los Angeles Showdown: Key questions heading into the matchup between the Lakers and Clippers

Should LeBron James sit out the rest of the season? Should the Lakers sign Carmelo Anthony? How big of a threat are the Clippers?

By Micah Adams

Key questions remain for the Lakers and Clippers as we approach the final month of the regular season(Getty Images)https://images.performgroup.com/di/library/NBA_Global_CMS_image_storage/a9/b1/key-questions-remain-for-the-lakers-and-clippers-as-we-approach-the-final-month-of-the-regular-season_64fb8cucuk481pcn1bqfccjri.jpg?t=1229591297&w=500

Things have certainly taken a turn for the worse since the last time these teams played back in January. In his first game back after missing 18 games, James led the Lakers to an overtime win to pull them to within one game of the Clippers for the eighth spot. Since then the Lakers are 3-8 while the Clippers have gone 8-5.

The Lakers can still win the season series and any potential tiebreaker with the Clippers as they have two more games after splitting the first two. Given that the Clippers own a better division record which is the next tiebreaker should they split 2-2, the Lakers likely need to win both of those games.

It's all the more imperative when considering the Lakers already lost the season series to the Spurs, their other main competition for the final spot.

If they're on the losing end of tiebreakers against both the Clippers and Lakers, they not only need to catch them in the standings, but also pass them.

We've seen James single handedly carry his teams for weeks on end and he's certainly talented enough to do it again.

However, if it crystallizes that a playoff appearance simply isn't in the cards, shutting down James might be the smart play. When factoring in regular season and playoffs, the only player in NBA history with more mileage at his age is Wilt Chamberlain. At this stage of his career, the addional wear and tear just isn't worth it.

That's before getting into the fact that losing games down the stretch could help the Lakers improve their own draft pick. Maybe they get lucky and win the lottery or snap a top-4 pick. Regardless of whether they keep it or trade it, losing games - and sitting James to help do so - could ultimately play a large factor in shaping the future of the franchise moving forward.

As it stands down, the Lakers have the NBA's 13th-worst record, just 2.5 games ahead of the Dallas Mavericks who have the 8th-worst record.

Drop from the 13th-worst record to the 8th-worst record and the odds of nabbing a top-4 pick in the lottery jump from 4.7 percent to 26.2 percent with the odd of landing the No. 1 overall pick going from 1.0 percent to 6.0 percent.

Where will the Clippers finish?

As mentioned in the intro, the Clippers are actually closer to third than they are the Lakers. It's anyone's guess as to where they might actually finish. Given the uncertainty at the top of the West with the Warriors and Nuggets both in contention for the No. 1 seed, there's a lot of moving pieces with matchups.

While they wouldn't be favoured in any matchup, they aren't exactly a pushover either. Since trading away Tobias Harris, they are 6-3 while posting a net rating that ranks seventh in the NBA, one spot behind the NBA-leading Bucks and one spot ahead of Harris's new team, the 76ers.

They are a pain to play against.

Since that trade, the five-man lineup of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Patrick Beverley, Danilo Gallinari and newcomers Landry Shamet and Ivica Zubac has a logged a team-high 101 minutes and rank first in the NBA in defensive rating over that span amohg all five-man lineups to play at least 75 minutes.

Doc Rivers is coaching up a team that is gelling fast and doesn't rely too heavily on any singular talent.

Although most of the attention on Monday will be on the Lakers, you'd be wise to pay attention to the Clippers who are a feisty bunch that could give plenty of teams considerable grief come April.

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